nodular pleural thickening
Malignant
pleural disease • Pleural malignancy (pleural epithelioid angiosarcoma) - Ganzer Fall bei Radiopaedia
Nodular pleural thickening is a form of pleural thickening.
Pathology
Etiology
Most common causes of nodular pleural thickening are malignant and include:
- metastatic pleural disease, particularly from adenocarcinomas, e.g.
- bronchogenic adenocarcinoma
- breast cancer
- ovarian cancer
- prostate cancer
- gastrointestinal adenocarcinoma
- renal cell carcinoma
- mesothelioma
- lymphoma
- invasive thymoma
- rare primary pleural malignancies
- epithelioid angiosarcoma
- epithelioid hemangioendothelioma
- synovial sarcoma
- pleuropulmonary blastoma
- desmoplastic small round cell tumor of the pleura
Occasionally nodular pleural thickening may arise from benign causes such as:
- thoracic splenosis is rare
- occasionally occurs secondary to a fibrothorax
See also
Siehe auch:
Assoziationen und Differentialdiagnosen zu noduläre Pleuraverdickung: